Iran has steadily restored about 38% of its damaged petrochemical production capacity and has restarted operations.

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Recently, the National Petrochemical Company of Iran announced that the country's petrochemical industry is recovering, about 38% of the damaged or affected production capacity has been restored to operation, and a two-month recovery plan is in progress.

Iran’s petrochemical facilities have sustained multiple impacts, with critical infrastructure such as gaseous processing units and power vegetation suffering harm, resulting in disruptions to feedstock supply and a significant decline in production capacity. Faced with the crisis, the sector team promptly activated emergency repair protocols and relied on regional technical expertise to carry out operations. At present, approximately 38% of the affected production capacity has resumed operations, and overall operations are steadily returning to healthy. Restoration efforts are prioritizing the assurance of alternative steam and electricity supplies, connecting to grid-connected power vegetation, and leveraging the energy trading market to bridge supply shortfalls. A two-month recovery plan has been launched, with the first phase scheduled to completion by the end of June. Through interdepartmental coordination, the petrochemical sector has achieved phased results in resource allocation and production organization, providing support to the subsequent full resumption of operations.

At present, petrochemical complexes such as Nurigadir and Sabalan have resumed operations, while Polymers polyethylene vegetation have also reached full capacity. As the recovery plan continues, greater damaged facilities will be restarted.

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